One of my favourite wines

Customer review of Domaine O’Vineyards Trah Lah Lah2008:

Posted by Francesca Jacklin on 21:19 07/08/2011

Comment on: Domaine O’Vineyards Trah Lah Lah 2008

A lovely rounded wine with plenty of berry fruit, but not jammy, and a nice dose of tannins that make it pair well with food, we had this with BBQ rack of lamb and it was gorgeous.

One of my favourite wines, the aroma is so heady it’s hard to put the glass down and you never want the bottle to end!

Thanks, Frankie.

Whenever you say what you pair the food with, my mouth starts to water.  You guys are doing it right!  Drinking this wine with goooood food.  The only time you have to put your glass down is to open another bottle! ;D

 

 

Customer review of Domaine O’Vineyards O’Syrah 2008:

Posted by Cindy Phillips on 22:21 28/07/2011

Comment on: Domaine O’Vineyards O’Syrah 2008

This wine was absolutely LOVELY! It’s just the kind of wine my husband and I love. Heavy, rich and flavourful. Absolutely loved it. Have put another 12 bottles in my basket already!!

Cindy has made us very happy.  We just love to hear when people enjoy the work we put into these wines.  Lots of concentration and extraction to get those rich, flavourful wines!  She used LOVELY, love, and loved!  LOVE LOVE LOVE it. 🙂  So good she got a whole other case.  Good times.  We’re very happy that this is her kind of wine.

 

 

Customer review of Domaine O’Vineyards O’Syrah 2008:

Posted by Mark Bonsall on 11:15 24/07/2011

Comment on: Domaine O’Vineyards O’Syrah 2008

Smoothness personified. This was an absolute treat and I’m so glad I bought in advance in bulk! Can’t think of anything critical to say about it really, it just slid down so well I got to the end of the bottle without even realising! Chapeau!

Hats off to another customer for an epicly well-written wine review. We love to hear that our wines are easy to drink… perhaps a little TOO easy!! 😀

 

Do you ever get the feeling that wine critics are making up words or inventing fruit you’ve never heard of to describe wine?  This morning, I took a sidestep in my computer-generated wine reviews project.  Instead of generating whole reviews, I am now generating new words to describe wines.  Here is a list of words that the computer generated to describe O’Vineyards Trah Lah Lah 2008.  The hope is that they all sound vaguely real.

List of Computer Generated Wine Terms

  • extremendously
  • bracked
  • erfect!
  • O’wonder
  • O’people
  • disappeal
  • commend
  • Motherwise
  • elsewhereas
  • vraiments
  • uncompliments
  • cracket
  • astounder
  • disting
  • uninspirits
  • recomments
  • curiositive
  • tastinctive
  • tremember
  • rangerous
  • astonight
  • definish
  • brilli
  • nothink
  • cours.
  • massic
  • changerous
  • differench
  • vinegativity
  • extremember
  • complemendously
  • cherritory
  • reminish
  • measive
  • gravinter
  • recontaste
  • Treal
  • tong….
  • complicious
  • refunky
  • greal
  • perfectar
  • Dangue
  • mell
  • superspecisitate
  • charaction,
  • afraisitate
  • boood
  • rephoune
  • memememe
  • whypecomplavound
  • suppoottle

To spice things up, today I’m highlighting computer generated words rather than whole reviews. This means the n gram analysis focuses on letter pairs and letter triplets instead of word pairs and word triplets. If you have no idea what I’m talking about, refer to the simplified explanation in my first post about computer generated reviews.  Basically, the computer looks at what letters commonly appear together and it makes up words based on the statistical probability of random letters appearing near each other.

The list starts with words that strictly follow the analysis (high similarity to actual letter pairs in real reviews of Trah Lah Lah 2008) and it slowly descends into the bowels of vaguely human-sounding language (low similarity to actual letter pairs).  All capitalization and punctuation was generated by the algorithm.

Perhaps of special interest, the computer generated the word “commend” even though that never appeared in the reviews.  It also got a couple of real french words like “vraiment” and “cours”.

I definitely want to add some of these automatically generated words to my wine vocabulary.  I wonder how long it will be before somebody calls me out for using made-up words like vinegativity, mell and bood.

This wine is quite differench. Extremendously bracked attack. Midpalate is dominated by gravinter with some notes of refunky vinegativity. Mell with a measive finish that reminds me of cracket cherritory.

I’m still tweaking the parameters for my computer-generated wine reviews.

Some computer-generated reviews:

“Delicious, deep flavours.”

While this is in no way funny, it’s sort of spectacular.  Nobody actually used this exact phrase in the wine reviews.  But somebody said “Delicious, deep and dusty. It should cost more.”  And somebody else said “Rich deep flavours and a long finish.”  And the computer sussed out that it could say “Delicious, deep flavours.”  It even got the punctuation and capitalization correct.  It’s fun to focus on the zaniest reviews the computer generates.  But some of these boring ones are actually much more impressive.

“really, really solid quaffing red. It tastes True again. Nice wines. Thanks again. Good effort”

I like this one for all the reasons mentioned above.  The simple parts are remarkably accurate.  And the note that a wine tastes True again is amazing.  You could actually get away with saying that in a review.  Although I think  if I had a greater respect for line breaks, there would have been a big gap betweent tastes and True.  I’ll look into that.

“The 2008 Trah Lah Lah Lah Lah Lah Lah. No, sorry.”

Lest you think the computer only generates positive reviews of my wine… 😀  Aside from being a hilariously curt negative review, this also demonstrates one of the most amazing things about recursive analysis.  My wine is called Trah Lah Lah.  So the computer has about a 50/50 chance of saying the whole brand name any time it decides to say Trah.  Trah is always followed by Lah.  And Lah is followed by Lah about half the time.  And by a period or another word about half the time.  So you see a lot of Trah Lah and a lot of Trah Lah Lah in the generated reviews.  But occasionally, you get lucky and the computer just strings together a ton of Lah Lah’s.  If I were using trigrams, this probably wouldn’t happen as often.  But for now, here we are.  And actually, in this particular negative review, it sounds like they’re making fun of the name of the wine.. so it’s perfect!

“Gorgeous fruity New World Wines, with their ‘old fashioned’ flavour”

Program I used

I’m using Gibberizer for now.  I might write something on my own later, but for now it’s all thanks to this beauty: http://code.google.com/p/gibberizer/

The settings are

  • Read input as: Lines
  • BatchSize: 1
  • Similarity: 7
  • Persistence: 5
  • Disallow input echo
  • Disallow duplicates

What changed since the last post?

If you read the last post on this subject, you’ll probably notice that these reviews are much more sensical.  So what’s different?

First and foremost, I changed the data input.  Instead of feeding the last 100 comments I received on Naked Wines, I submitted only tasting notes for the 2008 Trah Lah Lah.  That’s 113 reviews.  They tend to be a little shorter than comments, so the data file is about the same length, but all the language is about drinking wine.  This means that the computer generates fewer comments about technical aspects of the website like the MarketPlace and the vineshare program we’re running.

Don’t get me wrong. I’d love to generate comments of that nature too.  But I just need way more data for that to work.  Tasting notes are easier because even the real ones sound a bit like gibberish… and people often get so drunk while tasting the wine that the reviews tend to be a bit slurred by the end.

I should also mention that lots of the reviews are still total gibberish.. for example:

“A bit tannins as well. As a Rhode Islander to breathing” for a good 🙂 will buy again.”

Work in progress!

“Drank lots and lots of depth, it won’t disappoint”
–computer generated review of O’Vineyards wine

I’m playing with some software that will allow me to analyze all the comments O’Vineyards wines have received online.  One of the sillier, fun applications of this analysis is that my computer can generate comments on its own now.  😀

Some of you might be familiar with the silly tasting note generator or similar sites, but these use slightly different technology.  I’m working with n-gram analyses of the reviews I get from Naked Wines customers.

What is an n gram analysis?

Basically, the computer counts every word and then it counts every word pair and then it counts every word triplet and so on.  This data lets the computer draw some conclusions about what words tend to appear together.  So if I do an n-gram analysis of the phrase “I went to the movies”, the word pairs are:

  • X I
  • I went
  • went to
  • to the
  • the movies
  • movies X

The X’s indicate the start or end of a phrase.

The word triplets in the same phrase would be

  • X I went
  • I went to
  • went to the
  • to the movies
  • the movies X

How does the computer generate new sentences?

The more data you feed into the computer, the more n-grams it collects.  And it can eventually draw some relatively accurate conclusions.  Imagine if I do a larger sentence like “I went to the movies and had to wait in the longest line ever to buy some popcorn”, the program would notice all the previous word pairs as well as the new pair: “to buy”… and the computer might conclude that it’s normal to say “I went to buy some popcorn.” and that is actually correct!  Of course a lot of the time, the computer tries hard but just spouts gibberish.  Like “I went to the longest popcorn ever to buy some movies.”

This differs from the silly tasting note generator mentioned above because that generator works more like a mad lib.  It has long lists of words that are manually categorized as modifiers, nouns, verbs, or other parts of speech, and it uses pre-written sentence structures.  It makes more sense given very little data, but it is limited to what it has been taught.  What I’m working on could eventually be applied to any body of letters (even a language I don’t speak) and generate reviews based on an n gram analysis of that text (so I could do this for Japanese reviews even though I don’t even speak Japanese!)

Gibberish examples

Most of the time, the computer generated reviews are total gibberish.  The syntax can be terribly wrong.  Here are some fun examples of typical gibberish reviews:

This is a very good black-red with onions, sauteed pots with our Les American than Languedoc and complicated, dark fruitiness notes, but this achieved the lower they called it loved it. Even my 81 year when the wine, we had to open the duration is elastic, then essentially the oven as it needs taste when the tasted some mixed cases now decreased to say about to email the sale this bottle

lot of purple. Very floral with the market Place right-hand drive!

Got through fruit and Joe are in the minimum quantity !

Wouldn’t spoil something else on my anatomy. I do buy wine is not in favour of the buyer, and less fun!

I found it was a please passed over the price and my guests both gave it 5 out on it! I really want it?
Big (not one a couple of days when we got back?

Almost there are dark plum tang and can under for anything wrong with Sunday lunch – open the last remnants post-food start to see how this aspect of the price, in recent trip to Carcassonne and price.

If you’re looking to hear your tounge without food and you at the Trah Lah Lah Lah was reminiscent of view it is dashed good! Which we found it interesting last remnants post-food start to show the silly name it’s frigging fantastic price. Remember if it was a 2008 or 2009 vintage) compares to taking decanted, and do under for anything. I was very intense, a good time favourite of the best wishes for a while to get the two, i sense a marketplace (the 2006 is supposed to be missing out of 5 others one not to everyone (that’s just slid down and Joe) may be more than a Merlot) Cabernet blend, or from her tasting and it was subtle and give the producer an enjoyed this is due to financial constraints, and you are missing out of 5 others one changing to see how those 5’s ! :)”

It’s clear that the words are related to wine (and the computer does manage to group brand names like Trah Lah Lah, and mention my region, vintages, and other things that make this sound like a tasting note). So it sounds like English. But then when you actually look at the whole paragraph, there’s no sense at all! 😀

Computer-generated wisdom

Sometimes though, the gibberish words line up just right and there’s a strange sort of wisdom in the computer’s misuse of the English language.

Hi Sandy, you get what you pay for what does she know ha ha ha.

Swirl it intense, a good with the yanks in men, what I had, but the wine, but not quite quick). This wine front of her, was an open it was quite French.

I have bid? – I thinking wine. Rich and can understand the base proposition of those tannin heavy so a good with food… Lamb medallions, sauteed pots with onions, snow peas, and body from naked wines and as we worked our way throughout our stay. Ryan and dirty with food… Lamb medallions, sauteed pots with the seller can extending that basis I have order, you wanted us to the extra years in the vineyard and as always the sale this remarkable wine in the front of parma violets are they used to make a lot of purple. Very floral smell of Lilies and lots of flavour packed the grapes and Edinburgh and less fun!

Ya, I still need to work on it.

Totally unrelated to wine

Sometimes, the reviews seem totally unrelated to wine!

I found as always the last night.

Big (not one a couple of days when we got back?

I’d been toying it!

Why the heck am I doing this?

If you know me at all, you really should get used to me doing strange stuff all the time.  But there is actually a reason for this.  It’s raining outside and the paint is drying in B&B room #3 (codename: the Cabardes Room).  So it’s a perfect opportunity to further my research in data visualization and analysis.  I’m going to try to broach this subject with my technical audiences much more often in 2012 (including but not limited to a potential SxSW talk on data analysis for non-verbal experiences like wine drinking).

Customer review of Domaine O’Vineyards Trah Lah Lah 2005:

Posted by john o’mahony on 13:15 13/07/2011

Comment on: Domaine O’Vineyards Trah Lah Lah 2005

A awesome bottle of wine! Don’t be put off bye the silly name it’s frigging fantastic. Me and 7 friends picked this wine out of 5 others one night all agreeing it was our favorite. Well worth a try.

Haha, love hearing this sort of review.  Not only does John enjoy the wine, he disses the silly name, and he shared the bottle with friends!  That’s always the best news.  We like it when people like the wine.  We LOVE it when they share the wine with others!

O’Vineyards: pairs well with friendship.  That’s a great tagline … sort of has an alcoholic carebear vibe to it.

Customer review of Domaine O’Vineyards Trah Lah Lah 2008:

Posted by Matthew McClure on 22:18 11/06/2011

Comment on: Domaine O’Vineyards Trah Lah Lah 2008

Delicious, deep and dusty. It should cost more.

This is always nice to hear.  “It should cost more”.  I mean, it’s nice to hear delicious too!  But the fact is that our wines are really inexpensive in the UK.  Sometimes, if wine drinkers are very used to super market prices, they find O’Vineyards a little expensive.  But the fact is that wines of this quality take a lot of work, and they’d be far more expensive in most settings.  Naked Wines’ unique financing opportunities (they pay me long ahead of time, as I’m making the wine) allows me to bring wines to the UK market at much lower prices.

It’s great to hear a happy customer say our wines should be more expensive.  It means that our work with Naked (to bring the wines to the UK at the best values imaginable) is paying off!

Customer review of Domaine O’Vineyards Proprietor’s Reserve 2005:

Posted by Nik Denley on 19:03 29/05/2011

Comment on: Domaine O’Vineyards Proprietor’s Reserve 2005

I was asked the question, would I buy this again. YES! YES I would – utterly delicious. Definitely, needs a good breath before hand. My husband was so enthused with it that I took that moment to tell him that I’d bought a share in the vineyard ….

Okay, we’re getting a lot of great reviews and it’s hard picking which one to throw on the site.  This one isn’t really a tasting note, but it tells a story and made me laugh aloud.

For background information, we’re offering a share of a parcel of O’Vineyards through Naked Wines.  100 customers will team together to rent a vineyard parcel in the south of France and have it fermented and bottled with their own label.  Nik has bought one of those shares.  So she found the perfect way to break the news to her hubby.  “So do you like the wine?  Good!  Because you maaaybeee… might have bought the vineyard that makes it… just a little… wow, glad that’s out of the way. How was your day?”

 

Customer review of Domaine O’Vineyards Trah Lah Lah 2008:

Posted by Adam Dobson on 19:06 15/05/2011

Comment on: Domaine O’Vineyards Trah Lah Lah 2008

Smooth, elegant and silky, just what you’d expect from a Merlot and more… The Cab Sav gives it a superb balance and it lingers just the right amount of time until the next mouthful. Partnered really well with a plate of Toulouse sausages and mash with red cabbage.

Our review of the week from a customer at Naked Wines. It’s always great to hear that the wine is balanced and I appreciate that Adam chose saucisse de Toulouse since we’re one of the wine regions closest to Toulouse.  Sounds like a good dinner pairing.  🙂

How to find us

Domaine O’Vineyards, located in the North Arrondissement of Carcassonne, is just minutes from the Carcassonne train station, the Medieval City, and the Carcassonne Airport.
GPS coordinates: 43.259622, 2.340387

O’Vineyards
Wine, Dine, Relax at our Boutique Vineyard
Unique thing to do in Carcassonne
Wine Cellar. Winery Visits. Wine Tasting.
Wine & Food Pairing

North Arrondissement of Carcassonne
885 Avenue de la Montagne Noire
11620 Villemoustaussou, France
Tel: +33(0) 630 189 910

  1. Best by GPS.
    Follow the signs to Mazamet/ Villemoustaussou using the D118. At the end of the last straight part of D118, you will come to a roundabout with the Dyneff gas station.
  2. Take the exit towards Pennautier. Continue 500m to a small roundabout and go straight over.
  3. Look out for the second road on your right, Avenue des Cévennes which curves up hill (about 1km) to Avenue de la Montagne Noire on the left.
  4. At the last juction, bear left. the road sign “Ave de la Montagne Noire” (confusing as it seems to show a right turn)
  5. After another 500m you will see our red brick color building in the middle of the vines.
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